Victim of Grace
Transcript of Victim of Grace
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ZONDERVAN
Victim of Grace
Copyright 2013 by Robins Nest Productions, Inc.This title is also available as a Zondervan ebook. Visit www.zondervan.com/ebooks.
This title is also available in a Zondervan audio edition. Visit www.zondervan.fm.
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Zondervan, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49530
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gunn, Robin Jones, 1955-
Victim of grace : when Gods love prevails / Robin Jones Gunn.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-310-32479-9 (softcover)
1. Providence and government of GodChristianity. 2. Hidden God. 3. Grace (Theology)
I. Title.
BT135.G86 2013
231.7dc23 2012030899
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Scripture quotations marked (PHILLIPS) taken from J. B. Phillips, The New Testament in ModernEnglish. Copyright 1962 by HarperCollins. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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CONTENTS
1. Free Fall to Full Circle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
2. The Dream That Would Not Go Away . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
3. Everything Is Redeemable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
4. A Blessing Inside the Obedience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
5. Making Peace with the Mysteries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
6. A Banner Word . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
7. The Day My Daddy Winked at Me . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
8. Pure Grace in Every Season . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125
9. Dare to Dream Again. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
10. Hi. God Likes You a Lot! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
11. Going Home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177
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Chapter 1
FREE FALL
TO FULL CIRCLE
The LORDwill fulfill his purpose for me.
PSALM138:8 ESV
On a quiet summer afternoon, I handed my friend Steph a glass of iced
tea and offered a sympathetic smile before taking a seat beside her on
the white wicker patio chair. A rousing Maui trade wind skimmed over
us and rustled the outstretched limbs of our backyard plumeria tree.
A single flower on the highest branch surrendered to the tug of the
unseen breeze. Nudged by another breath, the flower fluttered to the
ground with airy elegance.
Waiting is the hardest part, Steph said. Its been eleven days and
still no word. Im stuck. I dont know if we should plan a move back
to the mainland or if I should start buying school supplies since classes
here start next week.
I didnt know what to tell her. Id been in similar situations more
than once in my life and I felt her frustration. No winning words of
encouragement came to me.
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Its beginning to feel like a test, she said. As if God wants to see
if I completely trust him no matter what. I wish he would tell me the
answer but . . .I finished the sentence for her with a line that was familiar to both
of us. But the teacher is always silent during the test.
Exactly.
I released the thin pineapple wedge that balanced on the side of
my glass and watched it float between the ice cubes. Im really sorry
youre going through this, Steph.
Thanks. I guess thats why I came over. I needed the tea and
sympathy.
I smiled and noticed another plumeria flower being tugged from
the tree by invisible fingers that sent it into a free fall. The fragrant
offering landed softly on the grass. Later that afternoon, I would collect
the scattered beauties and string them together to make a unique gift,
a homemade lei to welcome someone special who was arriving on theisland at sunset.
Youre in a free fall, arent you? I suggested.
Is that what it is? I was thinking it feels more like Im a victim.
A victim?
Yes. A victim of all the uncomfortable circumstances going on.
I have no control over whats happening. Everyone else seems to be
making the decisions about our future. She leaned back and gave a
sigh. I know God is in control. But I still feel like a victim.
We sat together in silence for a moment. I leaned closer. May I tell
you a story? A true story?
Steph knows me well, so my question made her
grin. Its what you do, she said. Yes. Please. Tell
me a story.
Two days after our sons thirteenth birthday,
I walked into a building in downtown Portland
in broad daylight. I was taken into a back room
Between here
and heaven, everyminute that the
Christian lives will be
a minute of grace.
Charles Spurgeon
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where all my clothes were removed. A man wearing a mask knocked
me out. While I was unconscious, another masked man thrust a knife
into my abdomen. Twice.Stephs jaw went slack.
When I finally came to, I was in a hospital bed with dozens of
sutures holding my midriff together. I had done nothing to deserve
what happened to me.
I never heard this before! I cant believe it. Why would anyone do
that to you?
I tried to keep my expression steady as I gave her the bigger picture
of the traumatic experience. The building I walked into was a hospital.
Providence Medical Center, to be exact. The man who rendered me
unconscious was an anesthesiologist.
What?
The masked man with the knife was a surgeon. He removed sev-
eral diseased masses and repaired my bile duct. I have a nine-inch scarright here. I traced a diagonal line across my torso. And another six-
inch scar here.
Steph narrowed her eyes. She looked like she might throw some-
thing at me. Why didnt you just say you had your gallbladder
removed?
I laughed. Because the experience sounds so different when you
dont know the final outcome ahead of time. Thats what youre going
through right now; lots of painful steps without knowing the final
punch line. When I only told you the painful facts of my experience, it
seemed as though I were a victim of an act of violence.
It certainly did. But, obviously, the big picture is that the surgery
was for your good. Youre still alive.
Yes, I am. I drew my shoulders back and smiled. Im still here,
twenty years later. So, I guess you could say that its true: I was a victim.
I was a victim of grace.
Steph put her glass of plantation tea on the end table. Our voices
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lowered as we talked about the mysterious ways of God, his timing,
and the challenge of seeing more than just the circumstances in our
life experiences. We reminded each other of times in our lives whenGod accomplished his purposes in us and through us even though we
couldnt see the big picture and didnt understand the difficult things
we were going through.
As Steph stood to leave, she said, I wish more people would tell
the uncomfortable parts of their story instead of just the punch line.
We need to know were not alone in the process, especially when its
painful.
We walked together to her car, gave each other a hug, and I returned
to the backyard where I went about gathering plumerias, selecting just
the right ones for the lei. I thought of how the lovely flowers had ended
up on the grass after their free fall. All that beauty scattered at my feet,
ready to be collected. Before me were dozens of delicate, uncomplain-
ing victims of the unseen hand that had plucked them from the tree.As I strung the flowers on the long lei needle, Stephs earlier com-
ment about how we need to know were not alone echoed in my
thoughts. She had said she wished more people would tell the uncom-
fortable parts of their stories. We need to see the big picture and not
just the punch line.
It occurred to me that that was what God did when he recorded
the true tales of many of the women in the Bible. He didnt airbrush
their lives or make excuses for their choices. He showed them as they
were. Real. Human. Flawed. And also deeply loved by the One who
fashioned them by hand and knew them by heart. Their stories are
scattered throughout Scripture, ready to be gathered up. I wondered
how many of them could see the big picture when they were in the
midst of their own difficult experience.
The scent of afternoon rain breezed my way. I could smell the rain
before I could see the misty drops. As I watched, the fluid grace gently
covered, nourished, cleansed, and restored everything within view.
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My thoughts ran to a deep place. I considered how there is nothing
I can do, nothing to make the rain fall or the wind blow. Unprovoked
by any act on my part, God gives me breath. He opens his hand andgives and gives and gives. I dont control his faithfulness. I dont initiate
his mercy. I can do nothing to earn his kindness. I dont deserve his gifts.
The truth is, I am powerless to stop his love for me.
I did nothing to activate his goodness toward me. I am incapable of
deflecting the endless showers of blessings that come from his store-
houses and rain over my life. Its all grace. Grace upon
grace. Gods extravagant grace.
Indeed, I am a victim of grace.
And so are you.
Returning to the fresh flowers cradled in my lap,
I finished stringing the lei and tied the two ends
together. I thought about how God gifted me to tell
stories. In recent years Ive been invited to speak around theworld, and at each event, Im asked to tell stories. I have stood before
thousands and told true stories of how God manifests his unmerited
favor in the lives of ordinary women.
Drawing in the fragrance of the lei in my hands, I wondered what
it would look like if I gathered up my free-fall stories and strung them
together side-by-side with stories of some of the women in the Bible.
What if I shared, as one friend shares with another, the uncomfortable
parts of the journey as well as the beauty of what happens when Gods
goodness prevails? I had a pretty good idea that the result would not be
one long, meandering line, but rather, as each story touched the next, it
would connect just right and turn into a full circle, like a lei.
In the same way that a lei is created so that it can be presented as a
gift, I now offer this gift of full-circle stories to you, dear kindred victim
of grace. May you see the big picture of your own story on these pages
and may it be evident that Gods goodness is prevailing even when you
cant see the final punch line.
Grace: (noun)
a manifestation
of unmerited
favor
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Chapter 2
TH E DRE AM T HAT
WOULD NOT GO AWAY
When I was twelve, a small dream took root inside of me. That dream
grew and would not go away. I knew the dream was odd, especially for
a preteen. But there it was, deeply embedded in my heart. I wanted to
be a missionary.
From the moment I first saw a slide of a sunset at the end of a
foreign-missions presentation, I knew that was what I wanted to do
with my life. I wanted to travel around the world and tell people aboutGods love. I wanted to translate Gods stories in a way that people who
had never heard them would be drawn in and want to know him more.
I shared my dream with my counselor at summer camp, and she
said, You can start by being a missionary at home.
So, while I was in middle school, I started a Chris tian club in the
cafeteria at lunchtime. In high school I persuaded friends to come to
church with me, and I went on numerous missions trips to Mexico. My
closest friends were missionary kids, and I secretly envied their child-
hoods spent in foreign lands among interesting cultures. My college
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roommate, Marjie, spoke fluent Spanish because she was a missionary
kid from Colombia. I was certain she had experienced more adventure
in her eighteen years in South America than I ever had growing upin Southern California and spending my summers at Newport Beach
with friends from church.
I couldnt wait to leave my familiar, comfortable surroundings and
do something significant for God out there in the bigger world.
But during my sophomore year in college, my heart took a detour.
I fell in love. My boyfriend and I became engaged a few weeks after he
graduated from the Christian college we both attended. I understoodthat our future would not be spent on the mission field. That wasnt
his calling. But it was okay. Wed have a good life together. After all, we
were in love.
Or so I thought.
On a cold February afternoon the following year, he looked me in
the eye and said it wasnt going to work. He didnt love me. He said
that one day I would thank him for making this decision for both of us.
My wedding dress was hanging in the closet. The invitations had
been selected and were on hold at the printer. As I slid the engage-
ment ring off my finger, the painful reality of what had just happened
pounded in my ears. I was unwanted. Rejected.
During that season of my life, if the term victim of gracehad flit-
ted through my thoughts, it wouldnt have found a place to land. I
hurt. Ached. All I knew was the blistering sting of rejection. I didnt
dare think that God was accomplishing some ultimate good in my life
through this.
I just wanted to be alone.
As an expression of true sisterhood, my friend Luanne came over
to be with me on the night of my disengagement. She told me I needed
a new dream. Then she did two smart things. First, she drove me to a
restaurant, where she ordered hamburgers for both of us and coaxed
me to take a few bites. Next, she asked if there was anything I wanted
to do or any place Id wanted to visit.
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I always wanted to go to Hawaii, I said. Or Austria.
With a wave of her hand, Luanne made another decision for both of
us. Ive been to Hawaii. You can go there another time. Lets go to Aus-tria this summer. We can see if the hills really are alive with the sound
of music. And we can go to Germany too. And Switzerland. And . . .
Her words of hope for the future released a wellspring of tears.
She pushed the hamburger closer, but I couldnt eat until I told her
about The Dream That Would Not Go Away how it had been in my
heart to go to the ends of the earth. I confessed that I had put it aside
when my heart became all twitterpated over getting married. Wishesof seeing more of this wide world had been willingly relinquished in
exchange for plans for a bridal shower, a studio apartment, and a shared
car payment with someone who didnt want to travel the globe.
Then let this new dream be part of The Dream That Would Not
Go Away, Luanne told me. You can stay on in Europe after our jaunt
and find a missions organization that needs some short-term help.
She made it sound so easy. And it was.
Four months later, I boarded a plane for the first time in my life,
and we were on our way across the pond. The ministry opportunity
presented itself naturally while I was in Europe. I served as a courier,
a smuggler. I traveled behind the Iron Curtain with three other young
women to deliver thousands of Bibles to believers in underground
churches in the former Soviet Union.
When I returned to Southern California, I was a changed woman
and certain that I was ready to become a full-time missionary. The next
step was attending the Urbana Student Missions Conference, where I
hoped to receive direction on where I would spend the rest of my life
serving the Lord after I finished college.
At the conference, I filled out an important form, carefully and
prayerfully checking the boxes next to the terms that best described
my unique gifting, interests, and abilities. That form was fed into the
grand computer (circa 1977) to match up my skills and calling with
the right ministry opening in some remote corner of the world.
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As I stood in line at the conference, sporting long, seventies-style
hair and wearing an embroidered muslin shirt from Mexico, I couldnt
wait to receive the printout with the answer. What challenging andamazing position on the mission field awaited someone with my
unique gifts and skills?
When the printout finally emerged, I held my breath and read the
words: Laundry Supervisor, Nairobi, Kenya.
Silence. Blink. Shuffle. Blink again.
Not exactly what Id expected, but there it was. Gods will for my
life.
I applied for the position of laundry supervisor and waited for the
confirmation letter.
Around that time, the movie The Hiding Placedebuted in theaters.
It told the real-life story of Corrie ten Boom, a prisoner in a Nazi con-
centration camp during World War II. I had taken a job as an assistant
in the Southern California office where all the mail for Corrie was pro-cessed and met Tante(Aunt) Corrie, as those who worked there called
her. I also read her books, including Tramp for the Lord.
I loved this Rosey Posey of a woman and longed to go to exotic
places like Corrie did and tell people about Gods great love for his
children. It looked as if that exotic place for me was going to be Africa
and not Eastern Europe, as I had thought it might be after my summer
adventure as a Bible smuggler.
When I met with the teen girls in the Sunday school class I taught,
I told them, Pray for me, girls! Im going to Africa.
Why? they asked.
Im going to be a laundry supervisor.
Blank stares. What exactly will you do as a laundry supervisor?
they wanted to know.
I went a little overboard, Im sure, as I spun the tale that had been
forming in my imagination. Im going to learn how to carry a big bas-
ket on my head. Every day Ill walk down to the river and join the
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women of the village. Well work together, side by side, singing, laugh-
ing, telling stories. The children will play beside us as we do the laun-
dry. This is how Im going to serve the Lord.Each week the girls wanted to hear more about Africa, and I kept
the stories coming, embellishing to my hearts content. Soon the
girls were confiding that they hoped one day that they too would be
selected to serve as laundry supervisors in Africa. They wanted to see
the land where baby elephants bathed and laughing children splashed
about in the river under the warm sun, and where women plunged the
dirty laundry of Nairobi into the same river that flowed with the pure
waters of Mount Kilimanjaro.
At last, many months after the Urbana
conference, the response from the mission
in Kenya arrived. I tore open the envelope
and read the letter. My heart sank.
They turned me down. I was rejected.Again.
The letter stated that my specific
skills werent a sufficient match for the
position. All I took in was the message
hidden between the lines: I was unwanted. A loser. No one wanted to
marry me, and now I couldnt even wash clothes for Jesus in Africa.
A few days later, I stood before the girls in my Sunday school class,
letter in hand. With a weighted spirit, I gave my sad report: You can
stop praying. Im not going to Africa. I didnt get the position.
One of the girls unsympathetically popped off with, Good. We
dont want you to leave. We want you to stay here. We think you should
find a job telling stories. We love it when you tell us stories.
Something deep and shame-filled inside me winced at her sugges-
tion. My self-image curled up into a ball like a roly-poly bug. I didnt
want to be a writer. I didnt like that telling stories had always been
easy for me.
But I trust in you, LORD;
I say, You are my God.
My times are in your hands. Psalm 31:14 15
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Growing up, I got in trouble for telling stories. Teachers called it
lying. My sister called it exaggerating again. My parents would
do the twirling-finger sign at the dinner table, indicating that I shouldspeed up my monologue and get to the point.
No. I did not want to be a writer. Telling stories got me in trouble.
I didnt see my imaginative way of thinking as a gift.
It wasnt that I was trying to be dishonest when I told stories. I was
only repeating what I saw in my imagination. And I only shared a small
portion of what I saw. I learned early on to keep the rest of the whimsy
to myself. No one wanted to hear about the images that chummed
around in my mind images of a kangaroo eating Cheerios out of the
palm of my hand, of me singing at the top of my lungs from the Eiffel
Tower, or of spending a warm winter night sleeping under the stars in
a hammock strung between two palm trees.
All fanciful notions needed to be snuffed out, including The Dream
That Would Not Go Away. I wasnt special. I wasnt missionary mate-rial. I needed to be more like everyone else and live a normal life.
So instead of returning to finish college, I found a respectable job
at a bank where I used colorless, unbending numbers every day instead
of vibrant, lithe, storytelling words. And I fell in love again. This time
to a man who loved God and loved me and who knew who he was.
This new dream, I found, wasnt a bad dream at all: loving and
being loved, marrying a godly man, putting my whole heart into mak-
ing a cozy home, giving birth to two wonderful children and raising
them together, serving alongside my husband in youth ministry. We
had a good life.
My insightful husband urged me to develop my natural storytell-
ing ability and sent me to a writers conference. I learned how to write
devotions and articles and, to my surprise, the first few articles I sub-
mitted were accepted for publication. Accepted is such a wonderful
word! I started working on a series of books for toddlers and knew
deep down I should be grateful for all that God had done. And I was.
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But somehow I couldnt shake the quiet sadness that came over me
whenever I heard an inspiring story of someone who served overseas
and was working among an unreached people group. That had been mydream. And here I was, almost thirty, still living in California, changing
diapers and writing childrens books. If this was how God was fulfilling
his purpose for me, then why did he plant such crazy dreams in my
heart so long ago? Where were the elephants?
I put aside all hopes of traveling to unknown corners of the world
and for the next ten years I lived the life that had been given to me.
During that time I kept writing, I kept loving my husband and our chil-
dren, and I was grateful. Very grateful. It was not difficult to convince
myself that it was enough. Life was abundant.
A Kindred Victim of Grace
Then came the surgery that altered my forty-year-old body as well asmy overall health and mental outlook.
A nagging pain in my side followed by abnormal lab results sent
me into the hospital. My husband and I thought Id only be there over-
night, not for a week. The masked man with the knife determined
that it was necessary to remove more than just my gallbladder. A sepa-
rate incision was made to extract two enlarged cysts, repair my colon,
and remove my appendix. I was sent home to heal and instead of invit-
ing Faith and Hope to be my companions during the convalescence, I
allowed Fear to make himself comfortable on the end of my bed where
he peppered me with vile questions:
What if more rogue cells still are inside you? What if they are multiply-
ing at this very moment, just waiting to take you down?
What will happen to your husband and children if you die?
What about all your unfinished projects and unfulfilled dreams?
When Fear paused long enough to catch his breath, Doubt was
right there beside him, ready to carry on the bedside vigil. The two of
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them delighted in taking turns at telling me how my life would end
and convincing me it had been a small life, really. The Dream That
Would Not Go Away would become the Dream That Never Was.The worst part was that I listened to them. I could have told them
to go away, to be gone, in the name of Jesus. But I didnt. I didnt
speak the golden command that would make them flee. I didnt choose
to believe that God was accomplishing his purpose for me and that
my times were in his hands. After many days of feeling overwhelmed
with pain and deep discouragement, I finally turned to Gods Word. In
the book of 1 Samuel I found the story of a kindred victim of grace.
Her name was Hannah. For years she had longed for a baby, but she
couldnt conceive. Fear and Doubt must have assigned themselves to
be her travel companions, plaguing her with their life-sapping accusa-
tions as she and her husband made their yearly pilgrimage to Shiloh.
The effects of those two unwelcome companions and their accusations
have played out the same way from generation to generation.By the time Hannah arrived at the feast, she was heartbroken and
wept a thousand tears. I knew exactly how she felt.
Her husband said, Why be downhearted just because you have
no children? You have me isnt that better than having ten sons?
(1:8 NLT).
No!My spirit answered loud and clear for Hannah. We were sisters
at heart across many centuries, and I knew her answer had to be, It
is not better! It is not the same as having a Dream That Would Not Go
Away.Hannahs dream was to have a child. Mine was to be a mission-
ary. Neither of us had been successful in fulfilling our own dreams and
the older we got the more impossible it seemed.
Hannah left the feast. She went to find a private place in the temple
where she could pray. In her deep anguish she wept bitterly, crying out
to the Lord. Hannah pleaded with God to give her a son. Just one child.
Thats all she asked. Just one. She made a vow, promising the LORD
Almighty, or literally, the Lord of Heavens Armies, that if he gave her a
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son, she would dedicate him to be a servant in the Lords temple as soon
as he was old enough.
Eli the priest was sitting by the temple door watching Hannah asshe prayed her heart out. It was a curious sight to him. As she prayed,
her lips moved, but no sounds came out of her mouth.
How intensely focused her heart must have been on those prayers.
How passionate and intimate were her expressions. She thought she
was alone in the Lords presence, and in her honesty before God, she
gave the appearance of having lost control of her senses.
Eli concluded that she must be drunk. He toddled over to Hannah
and told her to put away her wine and sober up.
The story doesnt reveal whether she told Eli the subject of her
desperate prayers. Neither the specific problem nor her sincere vow
were included in her response to him. She made no excuses for her
actions or the way she appeared to Eli. It was enough for her to tell Eli
these words:Im a woman who is deeply troubled. I havent been drinking wine
or beer. I was telling the LORDall of my troubles. Dont think of me as
an evil woman. Ive been praying here because Im very sad. My pain is
so great (verses 1516 NIrV).
Eli then fulfilled his priestly role. He blessed her and said, Go in
peace, and may the God of Israel grant you what you have asked of
him (verse 17).
I wonder if either of them had any glimpse of the big picture at
that point. That if God answered Hannahs prayer and gave her a son,
and if she kept her vow and the child returned to serve in the temple,
Eli would be the one who raised him. Regardless of what either of
them understood at the moment, Elis blessing must have filled Han-
nah with hope, because she went her way and ate something, and her
face was no longer downcast (verse 18). Some things dont change in
a thousand generations. Just as my friend Luanne had urged me to eat
a little something, to be blessed, and to dream a new dream on the eve
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of my disengagement, Eli did the same for Hannah. The result was that
Hannah went on her way with hope. Fear and Doubt had no choice
but to spread their dark wings and fly away.As I read about Hannah, I wanted to experience that same trans-
formation; that same infusion of Hope. What would happen if I dared
to dream again? What would those dreams look like in this season of
life? They would certainly be different than the childhood dreams Id
clung to all these years.
Sequestered in the bedroom, confined to my bed, I followed Han-
nahs lead and poured out my heart to the Lord. I called upon the
Lord Almighty, the Lord of Heavens Armies, and when I did, Fear and
Doubt fled. Hope returned. I tearfully asked the Lord to heal my body
and restore my health. With soul-level honesty I relin-
quished my childhood dream and humbly asked, So
what is it that you want of me, Lord? Whats next?
A line from a verse in Romans 12:1 settled in mythoughts. My Bible was still in my lap, so I turned
there and found the verse: Therefore, I urge you,
brothers and sisters, in view of Gods mercy, to offer
your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God this is your
true and proper worship.
The term living sacrificestood out. This was the starting point if I
was going to dare to dream a new dream. I needed to offer my body as
a living sacrifice. His Word said that to do so was an act of worship and
was pleasing to Him.
How can that be pleasing to you, Lord? You know how broken I am
right now. I dont even have all my original parts. Im so inadequate in so
many ways.
I thought of Hannah, crying out to the Lord from a body that had
been unable to conceive and carry new life. In spite of her inadequacies
and her deep pain, she was willing to offer to God both her body and
the life of her yet unborn son. Two living sacrifices.
Victim: (noun)
from the Latin,
victima, a livesacrifice
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THE DREAM THAT WOULD NOT GO AWAY
27
Almighty God was asking the same of me; to willingly become a live
sacrifice. And in doing so, I was becoming a victim. I was putting myself
completely at the mercy of God. I surrendered anew, offering not onlymy body, but all that I was or ever would be. With deep longing, I asked
God to give me a new dream, and then I asked him to give me Faith to
fill up the space that Doubt had vacated in my spirit. Like Hannah, I
immediately felt lifted. My countenance was no longer downcast.
I turned back to the book of 1 Samuel to find out what happened
to Hannah. How did her story end? How did God answer her prayer?
The words are recorded with understated simplicity. The Lord
remembered Hannah, and in the course of time, she became pregnant
and gave birth to a son. Her dream came true. Gods plan was fulfilled.
Hannah named her son Samuel. And as she had promised, she conse-
crated Samuel to the Lord. When Samuel was old enough, she took
him to Eli so that the boy might be trained to serve the Lord.
Hannah wrote a poem about her answered prayer, and Godincluded it in his Book. That small slice
of common ground between Hannah and
me made me smile. Hannah was a writer.
She wrote a poem and God published it.
How could she ever have imagined that
her poem would stay in print and be read
4,000 years later by another woman who
was desperately in need of hope?
I was about to close my Bible and give
in to the nap my aching body was calling
for when my gaze fell on one more verse in chapter 2 of 1 Samuel.
There it was. An added whisper of hope.
The LORDwas gracious to Hannah . . . Over a period of years she
had three more sons and two daughters (verse 21 NIrV).
My heart began to pound wildly as I read the verse again and took
in the abundance of those words. God gave Hannah six babies. Six!
The LORDis good to all;
he has compassion on
all he has made.
Psalm 145:9
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VICTIM OF GRACE
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And she had only asked him for one.
This is the extravagance of God. This is how he chose to bless a
woman who surrendered everything to him. With Hannahs life exam-ple in mind, I dared to believe that I wasnt a victim of circumstances
or genetic maladies. I was a living sacrifice and that made me a victim
of grace; Gods extravagant grace.
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Chapter 3
EV ERY THI NG IS
REDEEMABLE
I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD,
plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to giveyou hope and a future.
JEREMIAH29:11
Seven months after I read about Hannah from the confines of my bed,
I was up and about, and our family started looking for a new place to
live. During our house hunting, our nine-year-old daughter kept askingif we could buy a house with a gazebo in the front yard. She wanted to
see the gazebo from her bedroom window.
My husband and I refrained from rolling our eyes and responded
with the parental answer, Well see. We soon added probably not to
the response.
Her descriptions grew to fairy-tale proportions when she talked
about her dream of dancing in the gazebo, and how one day she was
going to get married in a gazebo. We finally had to give her the cold,
hard facts: Honey, were not going to move into a house with a gazebo.
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VICTIM OF GRACE
30
Where are we going to live?
We dont know yet. We havent found a house. But we know it
wont have a gazebo.Undaunted, she asked her daddy, who could do anything, What-
ever house we move into, would you build me a gazebo? In the front
yard, please.
His answer was the same all twenty-three times she asked. No.
That was that.
We sorted and packed in preparation for the move our seventh
in six years. After so much shuffling and downsizing, I thought Id gone
through every box at least once before. Not so. This time I came across
a manila envelope stuffed with old report cards. What I read gave me
pause. My first-grade teacher had written on the back of my report
card, Robin has not yet grasped her basic math skills, but she does
keep the entire class entertained at rug time.
There it was. Evidence that our daughter came by her fancifulwishes and imagination genetically. From my earliest years, I couldnt
keep my imagination quiet, nor could I keep the expressions of my
thoughts from coming out in story form.
Where do these foundational inklings inside us come from? Does
God plant the seeds of our dreams deep within before were born? Is it
his bidding and his doing when those seeds take root and grow? How
is it that some dreams seem to have been planted in us from the begin-
ning and yet never grow tall, spread their frilly leaves, or bear luscious
fruit? We all have whims and wishes that never came true. And yet we
keep wishing. Why?
I thought about our daughter and how her father had given her a
clear no about building a gazebo. My heavenly Father had given me a
clear no on many things in my life. Good things as well as things that
would not have been good for me. The things we hope for in life cant
be wished into existence no matter how delightful or spiritual those
possibilities might be. Why is that?
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EVERYTHING IS REDEEMABLE
31
It seems to have very little to do with the dreams themselves but
everything to do with the One who first planted the dreams inside us.
God has been a Planter, a Gardener, from the beginning. He planted agarden east of Eden. He is the one who plants
and uproots. God gives; God takes away.
As I was waiting to see what new dream
might be springing up in my heart, I thought
a lot about my long-term relationship with
the Lord. The conclusion I came to was this:
God is God. He can do whatever he wants.
But what he wants most is a relationship
with us.
Until we come to peace with the realiza-
tion that a relationship with almighty God
can happen only on his terms, not ours, we
wont have an authentic relationship withhim. As that truth permeated my heart, I
realized that any dreams sprouting up in me were dreams that God
was nurturing. If wishes lingered in my heart but werent bearing fruit,
most likely God was the one hindering their growth. The question was,
what was bearing fruit in my life?
The answer was right in front of me on the bookshelf. The new
dream that had sprouted in my heart had nothing to do with Africa or
laundry. This new dream was about telling stories. Then telling more
stories. And then a few more.
Ironically, I had been working with several publishers for years by
this time. More than thirty books had been published, and yet I still
viewed storytelling as my downfall, my weakness. My natural bent
toward embellishing was something Id tried to hide. How could that
impulse be a good thing?
From the moment a life is surrendered to Christ, the redeeming
work of sanctification begins. My inclination to tell stories was being
I am the LORD,
and there is no other.
I form the light and
create darkness.I bring prosperity
and create disaster;
I, the LORD,
do all these things.
Isaiah 45:6 7
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sifted in this sanctification process. My heart was being tested, my
motives purified. Why would God carry out such a process in the life
of a weak human?
A Kindred Victim of Grace
I found the answer in the life of another kindred victim of grace. Her
name was Eve. She was the only woman not born into the wreckage all
of us have shuffled through ever since the fall. Life for her on planet
Earth was as God intended it to be.
Then one conversation changed everything. Words from the De-
ceiver led her to disobey God, even though she knew the penalty was
death. And death did come. Spiritual death that previously unexpe-
rienced place of being separated from God. Ongoing communion with
God was lost.
As soon as Eve and Adam ate of the fruit, their eyes were opened.They looked at each other and saw their differences, their failings, their
flaws. Their inadequacies were obvious.
Thats when another death took place: the death of the first animal.
The consequences of Adam and Eves disobedience affected even the
animals. God slayed an animal and used its skin
to fashion coverings for Eve and her husband.
Could it be that part of what was lost in the
fall was a covering of grace? People who love
each other know what that covering of grace
looks like. They choose to love in spite of dif-
ferences. They overlook flaws. They choose to
extend grace over and over and over. But
when that love is removed and that covering of
grace is taken away, certain death occurs in the relationship.
Adam and Eve knew what it was like to be in a relationship in
which, despite all their quirks and differences, they werent ashamed.
Love covers over
a multitude of sins.
1 Peter 4:8
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EVERYTHING IS REDEEMABLE
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Not ashamed of their individual peculiarities, not ashamed of the other
persons uniqueness and not ashamed of their flesh. But when their
eyes were opened, they saw themselves and each other without thatmagnificent covering of grace. No longer able to look at each other
through the eyes of unconditional love, they became painfully aware
of their differences. Their disobedience led to death, and death had
stripped them bare. For the first time since they were placed in the
garden, they felt ashamed.
The solution seemed to be stitching together fig leaves as a man-
made covering to hide their outward differences. Fig leaves, however,
were inadequate. Only the invisible covering of perfect love and grace
was sufficient for them. But now that covering was gone.
Fig leaves could never replace the covering God had provided.
When the leaves were connected to the tree, they were living, green,
and vibrant. When they were separated from that source of life, they
slowly shriveled up and turned to dust. In Adam and Eves separationfrom almighty God, their bodies would experience the same process of
slowly shriveling and returning to dust.
Aware of what had happened, terrified and ashamed, Adam and
Eve went into hiding.
So much pain. So much sorrow. Such a great loss.
Yet something happened on that day of catastrophic loss that draws
in the rest of us with a gasp of hope. Yes, the paradise that Adam and
Eve had known was lost through disobedience. The magnificent cover-
ing of unbridled love and grace was stripped away. Fellowship with the
Creator was broken. A death sentence hung over their heads.
But in the midst of it all, God came. He made himself accessible.
While Adam and Eve were in hiding, they heard the sound of
the LORDGod as he was walking in the garden in the cool of the day
(Genesis 3:8). They were awaiting their annihilation, and yet no light-
ning bolt struck them from the heavens. No invisible hand reached
down and choked their last breath from them. Instead, the Lord God
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VICTIM OF GRACE
34
came to them in a very personal way. He came looking for them, seek-
ing to restore what had been demolished. Even though they didnt ask
for it, God was about to cover them with his love.Adam and Eve were about to become the first victims of grace.
What did it sound like when the Lord God came walking in the gar-
den? Were his footsteps heavy and earth pounding? Or was the sound
of the Lord God more like a telling breeze or a rushing wind that set
the birds to singing and the leaves of the trees to clapping their hands?
Did he come with a gentle rain to wash away all that was soiled?
Whatever God sounded like when he walked in the garden in the
cool of the day, Eve knew the sound. She knew it was God, not a deer
or a rabbit or any other created being. It was God and God alone. And
he was coming for her.
God called out, Where are you? (verse 9).
Eve was the first woman to hear the cry of the Relentless Lover.
From that ancient moment until this very day, Father God hasntstopped calling out to each of us. He comes walking in the garden of
our hearts, pursuing us, making himself accessible, and inviting us to
come out of hiding.
Why does he continue to do this millennia after millennia, when
all of us continue to disobey? We go into hiding, inadequately cov-
ered from the fear and shame that paralyze us. Yet God, the Relentless
Lover, comes walking in the gardens of our hearts, calling out, Where
are you? because we are his first love, and he wants us back.
Certainly God knew right where Adam and Eve were when he
called out his passionate question. No one and nothing is hidden from
him.
Could it be that his question was an invitation? By answering him,
Adam and Eve were responding to Gods gesture of mercy. He didnt
demolish them as they had demolished their relationship with him.
God didnt wipe them off the face of the earth. He didnt ignore them
and leave them in their terror and misery.
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EVERYTHING IS REDEEMABLE
35
He came to them. He invited them to respond to his question. In
this first expression of an extraordinary and extravagant outpouring
of grace, God established through their lives the theme of his Book:everything is redeemable.
Do we still believe that today? Every life can be ransomed. That
which was broken and worthless can be restored. Everything is re-
deemable.
What happens when we come out of hiding, are honest with God,
and receive the provisions he has prepared for us?
For Eve it meant that she lived. Her days on earth were extended.
God provided the skin of an animal to cover her nakedness. Eve was
the first woman to give birth, the first mother to experience the joy of
cradling her child and kissing his brow as he slept in her arms.
A bittersweet mercy.
We know this same mercy because we also deserve death. But just
like Eve, we got graced. God has provided a way for us to return tocommunion with him. In spite of all our failings, he remains faithful.
Always. Forever. He continues to beckon us into a closer relationship
with him. Everything in our lives is still redeemable. Hope pervades
every situation because grace covers us like the handmade clothing
God gave Eve. A covering that was pro-
vided only by the shedding of blood.
As I looked back over my life, I saw
evidence of this sanctification at work as
my childhood propensity toward exag-
geration and lying was redeemed and
transformed into the craft of storytelling.
The Lord turned what I saw as a weak-
ness I was ashamed of into a strength that
was accomplishing his purposes. I wonder
what would have happened to that bent in my personality if God
hadnt redeemed it.
If you extract the precious
from the worthless,
You will become
My spokesman.
Jeremiah 15:19 NASB
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VICTIM OF GRACE
36
Retracing the Steps to Discover the Treasure
I thought back to those girls in my Sunday school class who said theywere glad I wasnt going to Africa to wash clothes, because they wanted
me to keep telling stories. At the time, their suggestion seemed like a
bad idea. I saw my inclination toward telling tales as a bad habit that
needed to be purged from my life.
Even so, I began to wonder whether my tendency toward telling
tales could be used for good instead of getting me into trouble.
My husband believed it could. He urged me to attend a writers
conference soon after we were married. One of the speakers delivered
a memorable talk on what Paul must have meant when he told Timo-
thy to stir up the gift of God which is in you (2 Timothy 1:6 NKJV).
I knew I had words in me, and that those words needed to find a
way to line up and dance into the world in some useful way. If this was
how God created me, then certainly he had a purpose for me, a specificuse for this gift of storytelling. I felt like I needed to be a good steward
of the gift, but I didnt fully see my ability as a treasure.
During the first five years of our marriage, I struggled with my work
at the bank, making numbers, not words, line up and march across the
page with precision. The process drained me, discouraged me. But I
needed a job, and this was the one that met our needs. Thats why I
stayed there for half a decade.However, nearly every day at noon, I would take my sack lunch and
leave the main branch of Oceanside Federal Savings and Loan. Id walk
two blocks to the small Christian bookstore next to the ice-cream shop
and do some market research. Danielle and her staff always welcomed
me and let me eat my lunch in the beanbag chair in the childrens sec-
tion. If it wasnt busy, theyd let me interview them and take notes in
my journal.
What sorts of books do people come in asking for that you dont
have?
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EVERYTHING IS REDEEMABLE
37
What books are the most popular?
Who is your favorite author? Why?
On many afternoons I sat in the childrens section nibbling mysandwich and writing anything and everything that came to mind. I
had no idea how to be a writer, but after attending the weekend writ-
ers conference at Forest Home, I did have an idea of where to start. I
needed to get an article published. Then I could honestly say I was a
published author.
I wrote and rewrote a short devotional piece for The Upper Room
about a Christian I had met while smuggling Bibles into what was then
Czechoslovakia. I also shared that nothing in life is wasted. Everything
is redeemable. Even experiences on a summer missions trip.
It was a banner day when my acceptance letter finally arrived in
the mail. The magazine offered to pay me ten dollars for 612 words. All
I had to do was fill out the form stating my name as it should appear in
print. I printed my married name on the form and left it on the kitchencounter.
My parents came by that evening for a visit, and I told them the
good news that I was about to become a published author. My dad
took one look at the form and scowled. Thats not right, he mumbled.
Whats not right?
Your name. Youve been a Jones a lot longer than youve been a
Gunn. Give our side of the family some credit here.
I immediately crossed out Robin Gunn and penned what would
become my official signature: Robin Jones Gunn. I looked at my dad
for his approval, and my heart soared when he gave me one of his won-
derful winks. This was our insiders secret. I was Robin Jones Gunn,
and my father, the son of a Kentucky coal miner, was proud of me.
After that first devotional was published, it became a fun hobby to
see where else I might submit an article, poem, or short story. I took a
creative writing course at the community college and signed up for the
Write to Publish program.
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VICTIM OF GRACE
38
When our first child was born, I read childrens books to him. But
before he was a year old, I had written my own series of six toddlers
books titled Billy n Bear.The first few publishers I contacted turned down the series. That
was okay. My son liked the stories, and that was why Id written them.
I was content to use the books for that purpose alone.
Another young mom, Jacque, kept suggesting publishing houses
that might be interested in the stories, so I pursued those leads as well.
In the meantime, I continued to write articles and find as many ways
as possible to make money at home so I wouldnt have to return to the
bank job after maternity leave. I typed rsums, took in other babies for
day care, sold cosmetics at home parties, and handed out food samples
at grocery stores.
All the side jobs came and went, but my drive to write continued
to grow. More than anything it was an act of obedience. The income
was essential to supplement my husbands youth pastor salary.By the time the Billy n Bear Series was accepted by Concordia
Publishing House, I had almost fifty articles and interviews in print.
Two more series of books for toddlers were soon published, and yet I
didnt consider myself to be a real writer. I much preferred to stay in
the background, working beside my husband with the youth group or
hanging out in the church nursery with our son.
Covering up my small successes and going into hiding felt like a safe
thing to do. I grew nervous when people asked me about being pub-
lished, because I didnt really know what I was doing. I still thought Id
missed the mark. After all, I hadnt become a missionary. My earthly
father might be proud of me, but inside I wondered if my heavenly Father
had any reason to give me a wink of approval. Was God pleased with me?
I didnt yet understand that fretting about being good enough in
Gods eyes was a result of living under the law and being focused on
works. My redeemed life in Christ could only be experienced to the
fullest by living in the unforced rhythms of his grace.
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EVERYTHING IS REDEEMABLE
39
The motivation and the focus of my writing efforts took an unex-
pected turn while we were on a camping trip with seventy teenagers at
San Clemente State Beach. I found several of the girls hiding in theirtent one sunny day. I got on my knees, crawled into the tent, and said,
What are you girls doing in here? Theres sun, surf, sand, and boys out
there. Why are you hiding out in here?
Were reading, they replied.
What are you reading? I saw the stack
of two-dozen novels they had brought
with them from the library. Their idea of
a fun time was reading about adventures
rather than going outside and actually
having an adventure of their own.
Mind if I read with you? I said.
They handed me three of their favor-
ite books. The first book made me bite my lip as I read. The secondcaused me to clench my teeth. By the third book I couldnt read
anymore.
Thats it, I told them. I dont want you reading these books. They
are way too evocative. Youre thirteen years old! Do your mothers know
this is what youre reading? I dont want you putting these stories in
your young hearts. Everything Ive just read is the opposite of what Ive
been teaching you each week in Sunday school. Read something else.
Like what? they asked.
I dont know. Ill find some different books for you. But for now,
how about if you go down to the beach and start a new chapter in your
own life stories?
After the camping trip, the search for appropriate teenage fiction
began. I found a few novels at the Christian bookstore and delivered
them to the girls at church on Sunday. By Wednesday-night youth
group, they returned the books, saying they had read them all and
wanted more.
He saved us, not because of
righteous things we had done,
but because of his mercy.
Titus 3:5
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VICTIM OF GRACE
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There arent any more, I told them. Cant you read those ones
again?
Weve already read them twice.Then one of the girls came up with a brilliant idea. Why dont you
write some books for us?
Oh no, I could never do that, I insisted.
But youve already written a bunch of books, she said.
Those books are for toddlers. They only have eight words on each
page. I could never write a whole novel.
The girls looked at each other and then turned to me with a sense
of finality. Yes, you can, they said. Well help you. Well tell you what
to write. How hard could that be?
It turned out to be very hard. Writing a novel for a group of discern-
ing teens is a humbling experience. Every week I would take a chapter
with me to Sunday school. After I had taught the lesson, I would use
the last fifteen minutes of class to read the chapter to the girls. Theywere honest critics and never hesitated to speak their minds. They told
me everything I did wrong and everything I needed to change, includ-
ing the characters names.
I wrote about Uncle Bob and Aunt Bonnie; they changed the names
to Uncle Bob and Aunt Marti. I wrote about Ron and Christy. They
changed the names to Todd and Christy.
Each week the girls expected a new chapter or a revised version of
the chapter theyd rejected the week before. That meant I had to write
fast, which was difficult to do in the midst of our busy ministry and
caring for a toddler.
During that time I happened upon a paperback by C. S. Lewis that
I had bought for a class in college. Letters to an American Ladywas a
collection of letters Lewis wrote to you guessed it an American
lady, whose name was Mary. The two of them carried on a correspon-
dence from 1950 until Lewiss death in 1963.
At the end of a letter written on September 30, 1958, Jack, as he
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EVERYTHING IS REDEEMABLE
41
was called by his friends, wrote, Im a barbarously early riser and have
usually got my breakfast and dealt with my letters before the rest of
the house is astir. One result is that I often enjoy the only fine hours ofthe day. . . . I love the empty, silent, dewy, cobwebby hours.1
I tried to picture Lewis in the Kilns, the house where he lived in Oxford
that was described as a house of books held together by cobwebs.2
I wondered what sort of proper teapot Jack used, and whether he
took his tea with milk and sugar when he prepared his breakfast before
the rest of the house [was] astir. What did he see out the window of
his cottage in those cobwebby hours of the morning?
I was certain I would never know. It was too impossible a dream
that I might go to England one day and see his home.
I settled for trying out Lewiss work ethic. To make the whole
experiment jolly, I went right out and bought myself a proper teapot
and a box of English breakfast tea. I set my alarm for 3:00 a.m. and got
up to write pages and pages about Todd and Christy while my house-hold was still sleeping. The plan worked.
The phone never rang, my thoughts were always fresh, and I
became a bit of a tea lover. That set-aside portion of the day, from 3:00
a.m. to 7:00 a.m., three days each week, continued to be my regular
writing time for decades.
During the two years I was working on the first Christy Miller
novel, I sent off what I had completed to ten publishers. All ten turned
it down. Rejected once again! I was familiar with rejection. Unlike
the rejection from my broken engagement or the missions letter from
Kenya that said I lacked the required skills for the laundry-supervisor
position, the most common response from publishers was that there
was no market for a teen novel. They didnt know where they would
find readers for such a book.
1 C. S. Lewis, Letters to an American Lady(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1967), 78.2 Evelyn Tan Powers, U.S. Group Fixes C. S. Lewis House, USA Today, August 23 25, 1996,http://www.cslewis.org/about/press/1996usatoday.html.
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I wanted to reply to each publisher (but never did), Do you want
to know where you can find the readers? Theyre hiding! In camping
tents, in their bedrooms, on porch swings. Go see what your daughteris reading right now. Find out what books are coming home with her
from school. What library books has she checked out? Thats where
youll find the market.
When I was pregnant with our second child, life was difficult on
many levels. Rewriting again and again was neither fun nor easy, and
I found the weekly criticism of my teenage critics and the consistent
rejections from publishers demoralizing. Our finances were at an all-
time low. I was ready to give up on ever getting that first Christy Miller
book published.
But what kept me going were the girls in my Sunday school class
and a Bible verse I came across that changed the way I viewed this
exercise in defeat. I wrote the verse on a card, which I framed and
placed on the kitchen windowsill so I would see it whenever I washeddishes. On the card was a Victorian painting of a mother cuddled up
with her young daughter reading a book together. The verse I wrote on
the card was Psalm 102:18: Let this be written for a future generation,
that a people not yet created may praise the LORD.
I didnt know if the child I carried was a boy or a girl, but I did
know that he or she would be part of a future generation. What sorts
of stories would my children have to read?
I decided that when I finished the Christy Miller book, I would
make my own copies if no one wanted to publish it. This was before
the days of inexpensive self-publishing or any sort of e-publishing.
Even using a photocopy machine to print copies that I could place in
a binder was an expense far beyond my budget. So I planned to mim-
eograph enough copies for the girls in my Sunday school class, with an
extra copy for me in case I had a daughter. Maybe she would want to
read this story someday.
When the book was finally finished, I hosted a breakfast party at our
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EVERYTHING IS REDEEMABLE
43
house for all the girls in my Sunday school class. Raising their glasses
of orange juice in a toast, they told me they approved of how the story
turned out. It was as much their story as it was mine, and together wecelebrated the victory of completing the work. It had taken two years,
and now these girls were fifteen. Can you guess what those fifteen-
year-olds told me? They said they wanted more books. More stories.
We need more role models like Christy and Todd and the rest of
the gang. You tell us things about God when you teach, but when you
write about them in a story, we remember them. Your stories change
us on the inside.
If their assessment was true, I knew the heart-change piece had to
be something God did in and through the characters. I certainly didnt
know how to accomplish something eternal like that.
Undaunted by the lack of interest from publishers in my first teen-
age novel, I bought a ream of paper and asked permission to use the
churchs mimeograph machine. The girls in my class pressed me toprovide them with copies of the book they had helped me write.
Then, on a Monday afternoon in January 1988, everything changed.
I was standing in the driveway as our five-year-old son rode his tri-
cycle up to the tree at the neighbors house and then back to the cracked
sidewalk line at the end of our driveway. Our second child had been
born eight months earlier. A daughter! A wish come true. She clung to
me in the driveway, watching her brother do spins on his tricycle and
then pedal like a whirlwind down to the neighbors tree and back.
Our new cordless phone was as large as a mans shoe. Id placed it
on the front step, anticipating a call from my husband saying what time
he was coming home for lunch. When the phone rang, I reached for it,
balanced the chunk of modern technology on my shoulder, and tried
to keep my daughter from pulling it away.
The caller wasnt my husband. It was an editor. A real, true, big-
time editor at a publishing house. She spoke the words that altered
my life.
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VICTIM OF GRACE
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We would like to publish your book.
After two years of rising at 3:00 a.m. three days a week, ten rejec-
tions, dozens of rewrites, and hundreds of cups of tea, Summer Promise,the first Christy Miller story, was going to be published by Focus on
the Family. The baby daughter in my arms, who hadnt even yet been
wished for when I started writing this book for teens, would now have
a copy of a real book to read one day.
A few weeks after Summer Promisewas released, a letter from a
teen arrived at the publishing house. She said she had read the book
and had made a life-changing decision. When she read the part where
Christy prayed to surrender her life to Christ, the teen realized that she
had never given her life to Christ. Just like Christy, she thought she was
a Christian because she went to church with her parents. Her response
was to pray right along with Christy and commit her life to the Lord.
The letter made me weep. This one letter made all the hours,
rewrites, and rejections worth it. I held in my hand evidence thateverything is redeemable. But that wasnt the end of it. Letters from
teen girls continued to come with one salvation story after another.
Dozens and then hundreds of readers were surrendering their
lives to Christ after reading the first Christy Miller book.
The writing journey had befuddled, humbled, and amazed me in
ways I had never experienced before. I felt like Eric Liddell in the film
Chariots of Firewhen he said, [God] made me fast. And when I run I
feel his pleasure.3
God made me a storyteller, and when I wrote, I felt his pleasure.
Right after the publication of the first Christy Miller book, the
publisher asked for a sequel. And then another. And another.
We tucked away enough money over the years until we were finally
able to buy our own home. It seemed like a dream we never thought
would come true.
3 Chariots of Fire, directed by Hugh Hudson, Twentieth Century Fox, 1981.
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EVERYTHING IS REDEEMABLE
45
The Realtor took us to see a house near Portland that was part of
a new housing development. The abiding wish of our romantic nine-
year-old daughter hadnt wavered. She still wanted a gazebo. We pulledup and all of us could see that this house had a lovely cedar tree in the
front yard, but no gazebo.
Our Realtor led us upstairs, showed our daughter the room that
might be hers, and asked, Do you see that muddy field?
Of course we saw it. That was all we could see across the street
from that bedroom window.
The Realtor continued, That whole area is going to be a park with
grass and . . .
A playground? our son interrupted, looking hopeful.
No, not a playground, she said. But it will have a gazebo. Right
there. She gestured toward the field.
We looked at each other, stunned.
A gazebo? I squeaked. In clear view of our daughters bedroomwindow? Are you sure?
Yes. Why? Did I say something wrong? the Realtor asked.
No, you said something right, my husband said.
Without a hint of surprise, our daughter smiled. Her blue eyes
sparkled. I knew there would be a gazebo. My daddy said no, so I
asked God for one.
How did God do that?I wanted to know. Did he plant the winsome
dream in our daughters heart? Or did the wish grow in her imagina-
tion because her heavenly Father wanted to grace her with this very
specific gift in order to reveal himself to her young heart?
Either way, it was clear that God was giving all of us evidence that
he does have plans for us that are good plans. He delights in giving us
a future and a hope.
I saw that truth revealed again on a stormy Northwest afternoon,
five years after we moved into the new house. I paused as I walked past
our daughters bedroom. Outside her window, raindrops glistened as
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VICTIM OF GRACE
46
they dripped from the gingerbread trim along the top of the gazebo
in the park across the street. She was stretched out on her bed reading
the Christy Miller series as if those stories had been written just for her.My heart skipped a beat as I remembered the verse in Psalm 102:18
that Id written on a card almost fifteen years earlier, before I knew if
the child I carried was a boy or a girl. I hadnt forgotten how fervently
Id prayed that the book my daughter was now reading would be, as
the verse said, written for a future generation, that a people not yet
created may praise the LORD. That prayer was being answered right
before my eyes.
As I turned to go, she called me into her room.
Mom, do you think God has a guy like Todd for me out there?
she asked.
My first thought was to use the familiar parental answer of well
see, but that had never worked with her, and I was sure it wouldnt
work now. Yet I didnt want to promise her something I couldntguarantee.
I know that God has plans for you, I said. And his plans for you
are for good, not for evil, to bring you a future and a hope. Thats what
God promises in his Word.
My daughter put her nose back in her book and, without looking
at me, said, Im glad you wrote this book, Mom. It makes me want to
love God more. And if he does have a Todd out there for me, I want to
save myself for him.
What mother, from Eve until now, could wish for more than that
for her child?
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